Most examples of that link assume that you have control of the pages.
And most use the js of the browser widget as "helper" only, the widget doesn't
display
anything (is hidden).
Now you wrote that you don't have control.
So your "first experiments" method is one way to go, then you have full con
Thanks for the link, Herman - some interesting use cases there …once I’ve got
the connectivity in place. :-)
Best,
Keith
> On 6 Nov 2018, at 10:42, hh via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Browser widget usage examples:
> http://forums.livecode.com/viewtopic.php?f=93&t=29018
>
>
Thanks Andre for the detailed response and HTTPD library steer - that’s new to
me so I shall review with interest. :-)
I’m not in control of the pages, so that may be more useful than my first
experiments - which were to download the page content into LC, add some markup
and load the HTML text
Browser widget usage examples:
http://forums.livecode.com/viewtopic.php?f=93&t=29018
___
use-livecode mailing list
use-livecode@lists.runrev.com
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription
preferences:
http://lists.runre
Keith,
If you're in control of the HTML used in the widget, then I'd advise you
to build functions inside the HTML and just call them from LC instead of
executing script directly, such as:
in the html
...
function paintItRed() {
document.body.style.backgroundC
Folks,
I’ve found a few examples of simple inline script injection to the browser
widget, such as do "document.body.style.background = ‘red';" in widget
"Browser”
Is it possible to inject a multi-line javascript function - with variables
definition, loops, etc - in this fashion or would the fu